Tapestries

I’ve continued to create knit fabric art as a solo artist after leading the project to create the first knit fabric piece of its kind for Saddleback Visual Arts (see “Tapestry of Changed Lives under Large-Scale Installations). I’ve created pieces for weddings and interior spaces.

Each piece of fabric is hand cut and hand tied. I become familiar with the tactile stretch, pull, softness, fuzziness, smoothness, etc. of each knit material. The thousands of hand cut fabric pieces serve as my “paint palette.”

Conversations these art pieces have with the viewer center on the simple beauty of color and texture. The bold impact of even subtle colors in the tapestries and their various knit fabric textures invite people to come up close and perhaps even sink there hands into the colorful strips, to run their fingers through the tapestry as they might with a furry animal or when splashing the surface of a glassy pool.

This desire to be integrated into the color and texture of the work also comes through in how the tapestries often function as an element in selfies. In this online culture of shared images, the tapestries I create invite this response and collaboration. People naturally want to incorporate these installations in with their own images. Thus, the art pieces themselves become shared beyond their own location and become part of the fabric of the digital communities they are shared within.

My tapestry work for weddings creates both installations that serve as a visual focal point of ceremonies and celebrations, then function as piece of art in the homes of the couples who commission them. These pieces represent being “tied into love.”

Connect with me to commission a piece for your space or event or visit my online shop to purchase.